South Wales Evening Post

When April Fool’s Day almost gets pasta joke

- Lawrence Bailey heads up Whiterock PR and Public Affairs specialist­s. He is a former leader of Swansea Council www.whiterock.wales

YEP, it’s that time of year where it’s advisable to remember the date before believing anything you see, read or hear.

The tradition of staging an April Fool’s Day hoax has been with us for very long time but it’s lately become the province of the media and major brands.

According to those who document such things, the most famous remains the BBC Panorama item in the 1950s which reported how farmers in southern Switzerlan­d were experienci­ng a bumper spaghetti harvest.

Families were shown picking pasta strands from a “spaghetti tree” and hundreds phoned in the following day to ask for cultivatio­n tips.

There were told to “place a strand of spaghetti in a tin of tomato sauce and hope for the best”.

Of course, we’ve all since become more sophistica­ted, haven’t we?

Hmm, well, there was that time when respected astronomer Patrick Moore appeared on an evening radio show to tell folks about the imminent ‘Jovian-plutonian gravitatio­nal effect’.

At 9.47am the next morning, he said, (you can guess the date involved) the alignment of the two planets would weaken the Earth’s gravitatio­nal field and if you jumped in the air at exactly the right time then you’d take fractional­ly longer to come down.

You’d be surprised how many people still “fall” for that one.

Guardian readers were less taken in by a purported travel piece about the littleknow­n tourist destinatio­n of San Serriffe.

There was understand­able scepticism over how the island grouping was shaped like a semi colon. But it was the names of the two land masses, “Upper Caisse” and “Lower Caisse” which finally confirmed the newspaper could no longer be regarded as a font of all knowledge. (See what I did there?)

The Daily Mail had a bit more luck in reporting that a UK manufactur­er was mounting a recall for 10,000 “rogue bras”. The story claimed the support wire produced static electricit­y which could interfere with local television and radio broadcasts.

Although widely dismissed as a hoax, it’s reported that a senior manager at British Telecom put out a memo demanding female laboratory staff disclose what type of bra they were wearing.

Some gags are memorable for the wrong reasons. A couple of decades ago, the South Wales Evening Post carried the news that Swansea Council would shortly replace all street names with postcodes. The efficiency measure was to be introduced within six months, according to local authority spokespers­on Mason Preedup (made up person).

The level of outrage among residents had to be seen to believed and it’s a measure of accomplish­ment on the part of the hoaxers that the episode is still portrayed today as a real idea that was abandoned due to popular protest.

My personal favourite spoof was the Tesco Whistling Carrot. In 2002, the supermarke­t giant revealed the successful developmen­t of a geneticall­y modified vegetable specially engineered to grow with tapered airholes in their side.

When cooked, the carrots would emit a continuous high-pitched whistle. Scientists claimed the potential result would be future generation­s with slightly impaired hearing but much improved eyesight.

However, the foodrelate­d April Fool recognised as having the biggest commercial spin-off was in 1998 when a wellknown fast-food chain announced they had started selling left-handed burgers – and people trooped in to order one specially.

Sales actually tripled in some places, which just goes to show that as with spaghetti trees, you can sometimes take things pasta joke.

Be careful out there.

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 ??  ?? Above, Sir Patrick Moore told about the imminent ‘Jovian-plutonian gravitatio­nal effect’ on radio in 1976. Left, Panorama reported about the Spaghetti Harvest in 1957 and below, the left-handed burger in 1998.
Above, Sir Patrick Moore told about the imminent ‘Jovian-plutonian gravitatio­nal effect’ on radio in 1976. Left, Panorama reported about the Spaghetti Harvest in 1957 and below, the left-handed burger in 1998.

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